Thursday, October 24, 2019
Is Journalistic Objectivity Really Possible in British Society?
Introduction to Journalism End of Module Assessment Module leader Prof. Frank MacMahon Student: Fabio Scarpello Student number: 10182824 Report title: Is Journalistic objectivity really possible in British society. | |Notes: Words 2,275 | |Pages nine | |(ââ¬Å" â⬠¦ ââ¬Å")= Reference to article in bibliography |Introduction Objectivity is the standard to which every journalist should aspire. In this report I analyse the coverage of the European Union (EU) summit in Nice held between the 7th and the 11th December 2000. My aim is to underline whether ââ¬Å"objectivityâ⬠has been achieved. I will focus on The Guardian and The Telegraph, (both replaced by their Sunday newspapers on the 10th) and, to a lesser extent, on The Sun. My scrutiny will start the 8th and continue for five days. The report will look at: ââ¬â Coverage ââ¬â Prominence ââ¬â Use of pictures ââ¬â EditorialTo gain an independent view of the issues discussed, I relied on the BBC, (ââ¬Å"E U Guidelinesâ⬠), and kept its indication as my benchmark. Accordingly they are: ââ¬â Charter of Rights (54 rights for every EU citizen) ââ¬â Drop of National Vetoes, replaced by Qualified Majority Voting (QMV) for most decisions (Blair pledged to maintain six called ââ¬Å"red linesâ⬠on tax, social security, immigration, treaty amendments, EU budget and border control) ââ¬â Re-weighting of the Council of Minister vote. Due to its importance and controversy, I included the Rapid Reaction Force (RRF)Friday 8th Broadsheets give ample coverage to the Summit, with equal prominence. Front-page articles are similar. Headlines are coherent in condemning Chirac while the contents concentrate on the different aspirations for the RRF between France (who advocate operational independence from NATO) and Great Britain (who wants closer co-ordination with NATO). Comments from Government and opposition appear in both. The similitude ends with reports of the pre-summit disturb ances. Different is the approach to the Charter.The Telegraphââ¬â¢s tone is critical, comments however are balanced with Byrne (Irish EU commissioner) who highlights weakness in its draft, and Fontaine (EU Parliament president) who wants it incorporated in European law. The Guardian sees it as a triumph for Britain and voices its optimism with Vaz (European minister) who plays down Tories worries of a European Constitution. The importance of maintaining national vetoes is the main point of the Telegraphââ¬â¢s last article, while The Guardian ends with the gains of widening the EU eastwards.Editorials reflect the broadsheets different political stance. The Guardian advocates the UKââ¬â¢s advantages in dropping its veto on immigration, while The Telegraph reports on the intention of the Anti-EU party to attack labour at next general election. The Sun coverage is also comprehensive. The tone is more direct (ââ¬Å"Blair war on Chiracâ⬠), but still covers the RRF (comments from Blair and two conservative ministers), riots and Charter with comment from Jaspin (French PM) who advocates its legal status. The political line is clear in the commentary and in the editorial.Kavanagh (political commentator) sarcastically highlights the division within the EU leaders. The editorial tone gets almost menacing: it begins with ââ¬Å"Tony on Trialâ⬠and it ends with ââ¬Å"He dares not return home if he gives up any of themâ⬠(ââ¬Å"red linesâ⬠) Saturday 9th Coverage and prominence are again similar with both broadsheets dealing with the RRF in depth. Comments from Cook, Cohen (US defence secretary) and Smith (shadow defence secretary) appear in both. The Telegraph strengths its critics with Pearle (US former politician) who says ââ¬Å"this is a catastrophe for NATOâ⬠(ââ¬Å"Euro force stillâ⬠¦. â⬠) .The Guardian, in its defence, uses Chirac and Solana (MEP) who states, â⬠It is not a threat to NATO, we are not trying to make a n EU armyâ⬠(ââ¬Å"Chirac gives wayâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ). Vetoes are mentioned in both and it is interesting the different use of the same picture. In The Guardian it reads, ââ¬Å"veto cloningâ⬠(page 7) in The Telegraph only ââ¬Å"vetoâ⬠(page 11). The latter could be seen as a warning to Blair against dropping vetoes, whilst it is a protest against human cloning. The Sun coverage is poor with a single article. Scepticism against the RRF is expressed by Kavanagh not convinced of Cook reassurance of its real co-operation with NATO.Sunday 10th Both Sunday newspapers (Observer and Sunday Telegraph) comprehensively cover the summit with front-page articles and inside page focuses; however the Observer wins the quantity battle. The Telegraph front-page headline sets the trend: ââ¬Å"Blair isolated in EU as Nice turns nastyâ⬠. Within the article the RRF is not mentioned while the vetoes, Charter and the re-weighting are analysed. Blair isolation is judged a consequence of his attempt to keep the ââ¬Å"red linesâ⬠. There is also space for the Government intention to give up 17 vetoes in order to streamline the EU decision-making process.Still in the Telegraph, for the first time, is mentioned a clause in The Charter (article 7) deemed as ââ¬Å"further embarrassment to Blairâ⬠(ââ¬Å"Blair threatens toâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ) which gives the EU the power to investigate, censor and recommend a change in the law, to countries considered in breach of fundamental rights. The Charter is further criticised in a separate article for its moral and religious values. Several high rank ecclesiastics define it as ââ¬Å"Godlessâ⬠and ââ¬Å"a way to make easier for homosexual couples to adopt childrenâ⬠(ââ¬Å"Catholic Bishops sayâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ).The problems arisen by the EU re-weighting are seen as a blessing to Blair who, thank to them, hides his difficulties. The Observer front-page headline ââ¬Å"British police for Euro armyâ⬠counterba lances the Telegraph, giving ample coverage to the RRF. The accent shifts, presenting it as a police force rather than an army. The ââ¬Å"red linesâ⬠feature with a difference angle as well: Sweden is seen as backing Blair on tax and social security, and the PM voices, for the first time, his intention to drop national veto on immigration. Charter and the re-weighting are covered in a re-cap article on page 5. The focuses are different in angle and size.The Sunday Telegraph devotes a page, covering every issue in a chronological order of discussion (RRF, Charter, veto, re-weighting). Blair isolation is emphasised, and his interpretation of the summit, is ridiculed ââ¬Å"Mr Blair can give an interpretation to the British people. That does not mean that the rest of us have to believe itâ⬠(Here is a Nice messâ⬠). In this case it is attributed to a diplomat and refers to the Charter, but, according to The Telegraph, it could be applied to every issue. RRF and Charter a re presented as carrying a hidden agenda, which will lead to a EU army and a constitution.Blair handling is considered weak and partially saved by general chaos. Symptomatic is the closing sentence: ââ¬Å"It was an unhappy summit for Mr Blairâ⬠¦ but he was not alone at Nice there were no winnersâ⬠. The Observer focus owes its title, â⬠Europe- the elephant testâ⬠to Hague:ââ¬Å"If it look like an elephant and sounds like an elephant then, it is an elephant you re dealing withâ⬠. It relies on pro-European academics to highlight a new vision of superstate, shaped by globalisation. ââ¬Å"European identity is already being shaped by a globalisation of culture as a shared sense of European valuesà ».This cultural aspect seems to be The Observer starting point. Its reasoning builds on with the ineluctability of the process ââ¬Å"we live in a world where layers of governance overlapâ⬠says Hobsbawm, while Prodi (EU Commission president) stresses ââ¬Å"It i s the only way our nations can express themselves in a globalised worldâ⬠. There is not a conclusive definition of superstate; it vaguely states that it is a new entity, different to anything seen before. The report lacks comments from anti-European academics. The editorials do not leave space to misinterpretation.The Sunday Telegraph titles it ââ¬Å"alone againâ⬠and labels the Government European politics as naive. The Observer instead gives voice to Palmer (Director of European Policy Centre) who advocates a closer European integration (ââ¬Å"Europe not amusedâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ). Monday 11th The main daily issue is the re-weighting. Prominence is equal but the Guardian gives more coverage. The tone remains the same with the Telegraph portraying the difficulties of reaching a decision, while The Guardian applauds Blair for its success. The respective headlines mirror the core of the articles. ââ¬Å"EU leaders scrambles to fix a dealâ⬠prints the Telegraph on its fron t page.It concentrates on the squabble and difficulty of the re-weighting procedure using quotes from stateââ¬â¢s PM. Words as chaos and crises are repeated. Worth noticing, in the same article the concession to Blair for holding to the ââ¬Å"red linesâ⬠, even if the PM is reported saying that due to Tory pressure ââ¬Å"he had no space for manoeuvreâ⬠. Inside page articles keep the same tone and issue. A failed appeal to EU leaders by Blair for help in Sierra Leon, makes in print in the Telegraph, while is omitted in The Guardian (ââ¬Å"Blair troopsâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ). ââ¬Å"Blair holds on to key vetoesâ⬠is The Guardian headline.In this article the recurrent words are victory and triumph. The report uses a much mellower tone in describing the difficulty encountered. The Guardian coverage, in its entirety is more comprehensive with information on EU Parliament seat relocation and on the planning of the Inter-Governmental Conference of 2004; neither reported in The Telegraph. Both editorials criticise the summit but for opposite reasons. The Guardian claims that a superstate is very far. Nice is judged a failure due to politicians, including Blair, too concerns with their domestic interest (ââ¬Å"Naughty Niceâ⬠).The Telegraph says that Nice has failed in its main objective (enlargement) and labels it as a ââ¬Å"federalising treaty that has taken giant strides towards closer integrationâ⬠(ââ¬Å"The reality of Niceâ⬠). The Telegraph editorial line is mirrored in the ââ¬Å"letter to the editorâ⬠: Mr Garrod preoccupation that a future European superstate would suffer the fate of Yugoslavia and Soviet Union gets published. The Sun coverage is good but fails in prominence (pages 8 and 9). The leading article (ââ¬Å"Fiasco in Franceâ⬠) deals with the difficulties of the re-weighting, blaming Chirac.An increase in the number of EU commissioners and MEP are reported (overlooked in the broadsheet). A separate article credi ts Blair for holding on to vetoes. Plaudits to the PM are also mentioned in the editorial, even if it is considered only a won battle in a long war. EU difficulties are the core issue in the commentary (ââ¬Å"40 years of Euroâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ) in which the lack of popular consent for integration is seen as the main reason of failure. Tuesday 12TH Prominence and coverage is similar with the braoasheet now using the summit as an electionââ¬â¢s tool. The Telegraphââ¬â¢s headline ââ¬Å"Blair sold us short in Niceâ⬠denounces an unsatisfactory outcome.In it Hague reinforce his point of ââ¬Å"major steps towards a EU susperstateâ⬠and pledges not to ratify the treaty, if elected. The possibility of a referendum to decide on it is also mentioned in a further article (ââ¬Å"Tories would putâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ) where comments from Conservatives are only partially balanced by a sentence from Kennedy (LD). QMV and re-weighting are well covered on page 4. Mentioned also are ââ¬Å"e nhanced co-operationâ⬠(possibility for members who want further integration to go ahead) and ââ¬Å"demographic barâ⬠(second majority required for decision making in EU council of ministers based on percentage of EUââ¬â¢s population).Worth noticing that this percentage is reported at 62% by the three newspapers and 74. 6 by the bbcnews. com Charter and RRF are neglected. The Guardian titles ââ¬Å"Tories left floundering by EU dealâ⬠and looks at the election in buoyant mood. The summit is seen as a Blair victory in a further article (ââ¬Å"Blair balancing act â⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ) in which the use of a picture gives the PM and his aids an almost heroic look. Interesting is the assumption by Blair that it is the Conservatives who are politically isolated in Europe.Re-weighting and ââ¬Å"red linesâ⬠are analysed with predominantly pro-European comments. Blair vision of ââ¬Å"inter-governmentalâ⬠Europe (decision making held by a core of nations and not the EU institution) is deemed closer (mentioned also in The Telegraph). The Telegraphââ¬â¢s commentary is even handed (ââ¬Å"Blair battle taleâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ). Worries of a closer EU integration are balanced with approval of Blair handling of ââ¬Å"red linesâ⬠and RRF. The Guardian instead goes as far as to regrets Blair for not daring more (ââ¬Å"Nice enoughâ⬠) The Sun uses a picture to effectively illustrate the summit ââ¬Ës marathon (page 2).It criticise Blair presumed guilty of having agreed to a treaty, which gives ââ¬Å"more bureaucracy, secrecy and dodgier decision makingâ⬠(ââ¬Å"What Blair hasâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ). The editorial credits itself as the PM guiding light through the summit, and claims that only its pressure has prevented Blair to agree to further pro-European movements. The summitââ¬â¢s decisions are covered in an easy to read our losses and gain section. Conclusion Impartiality in the UK is demanded of Radio and TV broadcasts. It is enshrined in their codes of conduct and enforced by their respective controlling bodies.Due impartiality and prominence have to be achieved as a legal requirement (Public Broadcast Act, 1990). There is not such a requirement for newspapers. The National Union Of Journalist solicits journalist ââ¬Å"to strive that the information disseminated is fair and accurateâ⬠(NUJ code of conduct 29/06/1994), but does not mention any duty to political independence. Furthermore the Press Complaint Commission states that newspapers are free to be partisan (PCC Code of Conduct December 1999) On this basis, it is without surprise that the conclusion of this report is that ââ¬Å"objectivityâ⬠in the newspapers analysed has not been achieved.Editorials are clear in their political stance, with articles only seldom contradicting it. Reports are given different spins and angle, which result in biased information. Comments from political figure get different prominence depending on the paper orientat ion. Worth mentioning is that journalistic objectivity has been further damaged since publishing has been incorporated in a globalised financial world. The system derived from this development is based on oligopoly and cross ownership, which are two more stumbling block for editorial independence. This scenario leaves little space to ethical, idealistic code of conducts.In supporting my conclusion I would use R. Fowler comments that news is not a natural phenomenon but a product of an industry, and therefore shaped by bureaucratic, economic structures, government and political organisations (Mac Nair B. , 1999, 36). Bibliography The Guardian Friday 8th December 2000 â⬠¢ Black I. , M. White and R. Norton Taylor ââ¬Å"Chirac widens split on defenceâ⬠(Page 1) â⬠¢ Henley J. , ââ¬Å"Police injured as street riots greets leadersâ⬠(Page 6) â⬠¢ Black I. , ââ¬Å"East grows tired of waiting gameâ⬠(Page 7) â⬠¢ Comment section ââ¬Å"Fortress Europeâ⬠à ¢â¬ ¢ Wodlacott M. , ââ¬Å"France versus the mighty Americansâ⬠The Telegraph Friday 8th December 2000 â⬠¢ Jones G. , A. Evans-Pritchard ââ¬Å"Chirac angers Blair by backing EU armyâ⬠(Pages 1 and 2) â⬠¢ Evans-Pritchard A. ââ¬Å"Donââ¬â¢t mess with our tax veto, Blair tells EU alliesâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Jones G. A. Evans-Pritchard ââ¬Å"Irish Commissioner says basic rights charter is badly draftedâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ La Guarda A. ââ¬Å"Tear gas and riots greet Europe leadersâ⬠(Page 5) The Sun Friday 8th December 2000 â⬠¢ Kavanagh T. â⬠Blair has to turn nasty at Nice talksâ⬠(Page 1) â⬠¢ Kavanagh T. ââ¬Å"Blair war on Chiracâ⬠(Pages 8 and 9) â⬠¢ The Sun says section ââ¬Å"Tory on trialâ⬠(Page 8)The Guardian Saturday 9th December 2000 â⬠¢ White M. , I. Black ââ¬Å"Blair feels heat over EU vetoesâ⬠(Pages 1 and 2) â⬠¢ Cole P. ââ¬Å"Tale of two Britain and two summitsâ⬠(Page 6) â⬠¢ Black I. ââ¬Å"Chirac gives way in row with Blair over NATOâ⬠(Page 7) The Telegraph Saturday 9th December 2000 â⬠¢ Evans-Pritchard A. , G. Jones ââ¬Å"Blair deserted by EU allies in veto struggleâ⬠(Page 1) â⬠¢ La Guardia A. ââ¬Å"Euro force still cause of divisionâ⬠(Page 11) The Sun Saturday 9th December 2000 â⬠¢ Kavanagh T. , P. Gilfeather ââ¬Å"Chirac rips up the rule bookâ⬠(Page 2) â⬠¢ Kavanagh T. ââ¬Å"Sounding the retreat Yâ⬠(Page 2)The Observer Sunday 10th December 2000 â⬠¢ Ahmes K. , D. Staunton ââ¬Å"British police for Euro armyâ⬠(Pages 1 and 2) â⬠¢ Ahmed K. , D. Staunton ââ¬Å"How it turned nasty at Niceâ⬠(Page 5) â⬠¢ Palmer J. ââ¬Å"Europe not amused by this French farceâ⬠(Page 5) â⬠¢ Beumont P. , D. Staunton and A. Osborn ââ¬Å"Europe ââ¬â the elephant testâ⬠(Pages 16 and 17) â⬠¢ Comment section ââ¬Å"Europe will never be a superstateâ⬠(Page 28) The Sunday Telegraph 10 th December 2000 â⬠¢ Murphy J. , J. Coman ââ¬Å"Blair isolated in EU as Nice turns nastyâ⬠(Pages 1 and 4) â⬠¢ Petre J. ââ¬Å"Catholic bishops say EU charter ignores Godâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Murphy J. , J.Coman ââ¬Å"Here is a Nice messâ⬠(Page 20) â⬠¢ Comment section ââ¬Å"Alone againâ⬠â⬠¢ Murphy J. , J. Coman ââ¬Å"Blair threatens to wreck treaty over tax policiesâ⬠(Page 4) The Guardian Monday 11th December 2000 â⬠¢ Black I. , M. White ââ¬Å"Blair holds on to UKââ¬â¢s key vetoesâ⬠(Page 1) â⬠¢ Black I. ââ¬Å"Europeââ¬â¢s big four pull rank on minnowsâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Black I. ââ¬Å"Focus turns to power splitâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Comment section ââ¬Å"Naughty at Niceâ⬠â⬠¢ Hope C. ââ¬Å"Jeaux sans frontiersâ⬠(G2 Section Pages 8 and 9) The Telegraph Monday 11th December 2000 â⬠¢ Evans-Pritchard A. , G. Jones ââ¬Å"EU leaders scramble to fix a dealâ⬠(Page 1) â⬠¢ Jones J. A. E vans-Pritchard ââ¬Å"A marathon with jostling all the wayâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Evans-Pritchard A. , ââ¬Å"Vote grab by the Big Five leaves smaller states outgunned and outragedâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Mc Smith A. ââ¬Å"Blair troops appeal failsâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Comment section ââ¬Å"The reality of Niceâ⬠(Page 19) â⬠¢ Letter to the Editor ââ¬Å"Swift victory on Euro army may be Pyrrhicâ⬠(Page 19) The Sun Monday 11th December 2000 â⬠¢ Kavanagh T. ââ¬Å"Fiasco in Franceâ⬠(Pages 8 and 9) â⬠¢ Kavanalagh T. ââ¬Å" 40 years of Euro waffleâ⬠¦ now reality sets inâ⬠(Pages 8 and 9) The Guardian Tuesday12th December 2000 â⬠¢ White M. , I.Black ââ¬Å"Tories left floundering by EU dealâ⬠(Pages 1 and 2) â⬠¢ Black I. ââ¬Å"How big powers won big benefitsâ⬠(Page 6) â⬠¢ Henley J. ââ¬Å"Europe points finger at Chiracâ⬠(Pages 6) â⬠¢ White M. ââ¬Å"Blair balancing act tips election scalesâ⬠(Page 7) â⬠¢ Young H. ââ¬Å"Everyone was a winner at the battle of Niceâ⬠(Page 24) â⬠¢ Comment section ââ¬Å"Nice enoughâ⬠The Telegraph Tuesday 12th December 2000 â⬠¢ Jones G. ââ¬Å"Blair sold us short at Nice says Hagueâ⬠(Page 1) â⬠¢ Jones G. ââ¬Å"Blairââ¬â¢s battle tales hide truth of victoryâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Evans-Pritchard A. ââ¬Å"Germany becomes first among equalsâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Helm T. H. Quetterville ââ¬Å"Schroder hailed for back door coupâ⬠(Page 4) â⬠¢ Kallenbach M. ââ¬Å"Tories would put new treaty to a referendumâ⬠(Page 14) The Sun Tuesday 12th December 2000 â⬠¢ Kavanagh T. ââ¬Å"What Blair has really given usâ⬠(Page 2) â⬠¢ The Sun say section ââ¬Å"Blair owes usâ⬠(Page 8) â⬠¢ Kavanagh T. ââ¬Å"French farceâ⬠(Page 8) â⬠¢ htpp://www. bbcnews. com ââ¬Å"EU Guidelinesâ⬠(07 December 2000) â⬠¢ htpp://www. bbcnews. com ââ¬Å"EU Summit at a glanceâ⬠(12 December 2000) â⬠¢ htpp://www. bbcnews. com ââ¬Å"EU Analysisâ⬠(11 December 2000) Background Reading â⬠¢ Curren J. , J. Seaton (1991) Power without responsibility.The press and broadcasting in Britain. London, Routledge â⬠¢ Mc Nair B. , (1999) News and Journalism in the UK. New York, Routledge â⬠¢ Wilson J. , (1996) Understanding Journalism. London, Routledge â⬠¢ Stevenson N. , (1999) The transformation of the Media. Globalisation, morality and ethics. New York, Pearson Education Ltd. â⬠¢ Branston G. , R. Stafford, (1991) The Media Studentââ¬â¢s Book London, Routledge Material supplied by TVU â⬠¢ Hilton A. , (1996) Report Writing London, Kogan Page Ltd â⬠¢ UK Press Complaint Commission Code of Practise. â⬠¢ ITC Guidelines. â⬠¢ BBC Editorialââ¬â¢s Values. â⬠¢ NUJ Code of Conduct
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